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Trauma Therapy in Colorado

Explore support for trauma-related stress, emotional overwhelm, and difficult life experiences while browsing therapists across Colorado.

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Use the filter options to find available therapists by specialty, insurance, location and age group.

Appointments may be available in as little as 48 hours. Many major insurance plans accepted.

How Trauma Can Affect Emotional Safety, Relationships & Daily Life

Trauma can affect emotional wellbeing, relationships, communication, confidence, routines, and the ability to feel emotionally present throughout daily life. Many individuals experience stress, emotional overwhelm, anxiety, frustration, exhaustion, avoidance behaviors, difficulty concentrating, or feeling disconnected from others while navigating challenges related to trauma.

Over time, these experiences may affect work, school, parenting, intimacy, emotional regulation, self-esteem, decision-making, and overall quality of life. Some individuals notice ongoing strain connected to burnout, family dynamics, major life transitions, identity concerns, health-related stress, or difficulty balancing personal responsibilities and emotional needs.

Therapists across Colorado provide support for trauma through approaches tailored to each individual’s experiences, goals, relationships, lifestyle, and emotional wellbeing.

How Therapy Can Help

Therapy can provide support, perspective, and practical tools for navigating challenges, improving emotional well-being, and building healthier patterns over time.

Better Understand Patterns & Behaviors

Therapy can help individuals recognize emotional patterns, thought processes, relationship dynamics, and behaviors that may be affecting daily life and overall well-being.

Develop Healthier Coping Strategies

Many people use therapy to build practical tools for managing stress, navigating challenges, improving communication, and responding to difficult situations more effectively.

Improve Emotional Awareness & Regulation

Therapy can support greater self-awareness, emotional balance, boundary-setting, and confidence in managing emotions across work, relationships, and everyday life.

Support Long-Term Personal Growth

In addition to addressing immediate concerns, therapy can help individuals strengthen resilience, improve self-understanding, and build healthier long-term habits and routines.

Evidence-Based Therapy Approaches for Trauma

Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT)

Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT) helps individuals examine and reframe unhelpful beliefs connected to trauma, stress, and difficult life experiences. Therapy focuses on building healthier thought patterns, emotional processing skills, and long-term coping strategies.

Learn more about Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT) >

Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR)

Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) helps individuals process distressing experiences, trauma, anxiety, and emotionally overwhelming memories. This evidence-based therapy supports emotional healing while helping reduce the intensity of difficult emotional responses over time.

Learn more about Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) >

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) helps people identify unhelpful thought patterns, emotional responses, and behaviors while developing healthier coping strategies and practical tools for daily life. CBT is commonly used to support anxiety, depression, stress, relationship challenges, trauma-related concerns, and emotional regulation.

Learn more about Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) >

Internal Family Systems (IFS)

Internal Family Systems (IFS) therapy helps individuals better understand different emotional “parts” within themselves and how those parts influence thoughts, behaviors, and relationships. Therapy focuses on self-awareness, emotional healing, and developing a more balanced internal system.

Learn more about Internal Family Systems (IFS) >

Somatic Experiencing Therapy

Somatic Experiencing Therapy focuses on the connection between emotional experiences and physical sensations within the body. Therapy helps individuals develop greater awareness of nervous system responses while supporting emotional regulation, stress reduction, and recovery from overwhelming experiences.

Learn more about Somatic Experiencing Therapy >

Brainspotting

Brainspotting is a focused therapeutic approach that helps individuals process emotional experiences, stress, and trauma by identifying eye positions connected to stored emotional responses. This approach may support emotional regulation, resilience, and improved day-to-day functioning.

Learn more about Brainspotting >

Frequently Asked Questions About Trauma

Trauma can affect people in many different ways. Some individuals experience intrusive memories, strong emotional reactions, or difficulty feeling safe. Others notice challenges with trust, relationships, self-esteem, emotional regulation, boundaries, or coping with stress. In some cases, people may not immediately connect these struggles to past experiences at all.

Therapy helps individuals understand how traumatic or overwhelming experiences may be influencing their thoughts, emotions, behaviors, relationships, and overall well-being. Rather than focusing solely on what happened, therapy often explores how those experiences continue to affect life in the present.

Many people seek therapy because they feel stuck in recurring patterns they cannot fully explain. They may find themselves struggling with trust, avoiding vulnerability, feeling disconnected from others, becoming highly self-critical, or reacting strongly to situations that seem manageable on the surface. Others carry feelings of shame, guilt, fear, or emotional pain that have remained with them long after difficult experiences ended.

Therapy can provide a supportive environment for processing these experiences while developing healthier ways of coping, relating, and moving forward. Over time, many individuals gain greater self-awareness, emotional flexibility, resilience, and confidence in their ability to navigate life and relationships.

The goal is not to erase the past. The goal is to help people understand how the past may be affecting the present and create opportunities for healing, growth, and meaningful change.

Trauma does not always show up as obvious memories or emotional reactions tied directly to a specific event. In many cases, its effects appear through patterns that influence how people think, feel, relate to others, and respond to everyday situations.

You may find yourself struggling with trust, feeling uncomfortable with vulnerability, becoming highly self-critical, fearing rejection, avoiding conflict, or feeling emotionally disconnected from others. Some individuals notice difficulty setting boundaries, a tendency to people-please, persistent feelings of guilt or shame, or challenges feeling safe and secure in relationships.

Others experience heightened stress responses, emotional overwhelm, difficulty regulating emotions, or a tendency to withdraw when situations feel difficult or uncertain.

Trauma can also influence the beliefs people develop about themselves and the world around them. Individuals may find themselves thinking they are not good enough, that they must always be on guard, that others cannot be trusted, or that their needs are less important than those of other people.

A useful question to consider is, "Are there patterns in my life that seem to repeat themselves even though I genuinely want things to be different?" If certain emotional reactions, relationship struggles, coping behaviors, or beliefs continue appearing despite your best efforts to change them, trauma may be playing a larger role than you realize.

One of the most common misconceptions about trauma is that it only refers to catastrophic or life-threatening events.

While trauma can certainly result from experiences such as violence, serious accidents, abuse, or disasters, people can also be deeply affected by experiences that are less obvious from the outside. Ongoing criticism, chronic instability, emotional neglect, difficult childhood experiences, bullying, betrayal, medical experiences, and other overwhelming situations can have lasting effects as well.

Another common misunderstanding is that trauma is defined solely by what happened. In reality, trauma is often better understood by looking at how an experience affects a person and whether it overwhelms their ability to cope, process, or recover.

People are also sometimes surprised to learn that trauma does not always result in PTSD. Trauma can affect self-esteem, relationships, attachment, emotional regulation, trust, boundaries, and coping patterns without necessarily leading to a PTSD diagnosis.

Perhaps most importantly, many individuals dismiss their own experiences because they believe others have gone through worse situations. Comparing pain in this way often prevents people from acknowledging the very real impact their experiences may have had.

Trauma is not a competition. If an experience continues affecting your well-being, relationships, or quality of life, its impact deserves attention and care.

This is one of the questions many people ask when they begin exploring the impact of trauma. Logically, you may know that an experience happened years ago. You may understand that the situation is over and that you survived it. Yet despite that awareness, certain emotions, beliefs, fears, or patterns may continue appearing in the present.

The reason is that difficult experiences can shape how people understand themselves, other people, and the world around them.

For example, someone who experienced repeated criticism may develop a strong fear of failure. Someone who experienced betrayal may struggle to trust others. Someone who grew up in an unpredictable environment may become highly alert to potential problems or conflict. These patterns often develop as adaptive responses that helped a person cope at the time.

The challenge is that coping strategies that were once protective may continue operating long after they are needed. Many people become frustrated because they believe they should simply be able to move on. In reality, trauma-related patterns are often deeply connected to emotions, beliefs, relationships, and nervous system responses that developed over time.

Therapy can help individuals better understand these patterns and create opportunities for healing, growth, and change. Rather than remaining trapped by experiences from the past, people can learn new ways of relating to themselves, others, and the world around them.

Trauma and PTSD are closely related, but they are not the same thing. Trauma refers to the emotional, psychological, and physiological impact of distressing or overwhelming experiences. People can be affected by trauma in many different ways, and those effects may show up in relationships, emotional well-being, self-esteem, coping patterns, trust, attachment, or other areas of life.

PTSD, or Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, is a specific mental health condition that can develop after exposure to traumatic events. PTSD often involves symptoms such as intrusive memories, nightmares, avoidance, heightened alertness, distressing reactions to reminders, and ongoing difficulties that significantly affect daily functioning.

An important distinction is that not everyone who experiences trauma develops PTSD. Many people experience lasting effects from difficult experiences without meeting criteria for a PTSD diagnosis.

At the same time, PTSD is one of several ways trauma can affect people. Trauma-related challenges can also appear through relationship difficulties, emotional distress, anxiety, depression, self-esteem concerns, attachment patterns, and other responses. Understanding the difference can help people recognize that they do not need a PTSD diagnosis for trauma-informed support to be beneficial.

Yes. Many people begin therapy after carrying the effects of trauma for years or even decades. Some have spent much of their lives adapting to patterns that once helped them survive difficult experiences. Others may not realize until adulthood how strongly past experiences have influenced their relationships, emotions, self-image, or coping strategies.

When these patterns have existed for a long time, it is easy to assume they are permanent. Fortunately, healing remains possible.

People are capable of developing new ways of understanding themselves, building healthier relationships, regulating emotions, setting boundaries, and responding to challenges. Therapy can help individuals recognize patterns that no longer serve them while creating opportunities for growth and change.

Healing does not necessarily mean forgetting the past or pretending difficult experiences never occurred. More often, it means reducing the influence those experiences have over present-day choices, relationships, and emotional well-being.

Many people describe healing as feeling more connected to themselves, more secure in relationships, more compassionate toward their own experiences, and more capable of living according to their values rather than their fears. No matter how long trauma-related patterns have been present, meaningful change remains possible.

Yes. For many individuals, online therapy can be an effective and accessible way to receive support for trauma-related concerns.

Virtual therapy allows people to work with a therapist from an environment that feels familiar and comfortable while exploring difficult experiences, emotional patterns, relationship concerns, and personal goals. For some individuals, this increased sense of comfort can make it easier to engage in the therapeutic process.

Online therapy may also improve access to care by expanding options for finding therapists with experience in trauma-informed treatment and related specialties.

Many trauma-focused therapeutic approaches can be effectively adapted for telehealth. The effectiveness of treatment often depends more on the quality of the therapeutic relationship, the therapist's expertise, and the individual's readiness to engage in the process than whether sessions occur online or in person.

For many people, online therapy provides a flexible and effective path toward healing, self-understanding, and meaningful change.

Many people delay seeking support because they question whether their experiences were serious enough to matter.

They may tell themselves:

Other people had it worse.
It happened a long time ago.
I should be over it by now.
It doesn't affect me anymore.
There's no point in bringing it up.

At the same time, they may continue struggling with patterns, emotions, relationship challenges, or beliefs that seem connected to those experiences.

A useful question to consider is, "How much of my life is being shaped by experiences I thought I had already moved past?" For some people, the answer appears in relationships. For others, it may show up through self-esteem, trust, emotional regulation, boundaries, anxiety, avoidance, or coping patterns.

You do not need to meet specific criteria for PTSD or be in crisis to benefit from trauma-informed therapy. Support can be valuable whenever past experiences continue affecting your well-being, relationships, or ability to live in ways that feel meaningful and fulfilling.

Seeking support is not about proving that something was traumatic enough. It is about recognizing that your experiences matter and that you deserve support in understanding and healing from their impact.

We Work With Your Insurance

Westside Behavioral Care works with many major insurance providers to help make therapy more accessible and affordable. Coverage for counseling may vary depending on your plan, therapist availability, and whether you are seeking virtual or in-person sessions.

You can filter therapists based on your plan to find covered care quickly.

Browse Therapists

View the full directory of therapists who meet your selected criteria, including those with availability beyond the soonest openings shown above.

Christine Mathias
Christine Mathias

Licensed Professional Counselor

5.0· 1 review

Christine empowers adults and teens managing ADHD and trauma with a compassionate, mindfulness-based approach to foster healing and resilience.


  • ADHD, Trauma, and Anxiety
  • Self Pay
  • In-Person · Aurora, CO 80014
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Kimberly Callahan
Kimberly Callahan

Licensed Clinical Social Worker

5.0· 4 reviews

Kimberly provides compassionate, holistic care for neurodivergent children and adults, using CBT and DBT to help her clients overcome anxiety, ADHD, and trauma while fostering resilience.


  • ADHD, Anxiety, and Trauma
  • Self Pay
  • In-Person · Lakewood, CO 80215
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Stephanie Winkler
Stephanie Winkler

Licensed Professional Counselor

Stephanie provides empowering, client-centered therapy for adults overcoming trauma and relationship issues, using EMDR to help her clients build resilience and find healing.


  • Trauma, Depression, and Anxiety
  • Self Pay
  • In-Person · Broomfield, CO 80020
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Nich Dhillon
Nich Dhillon

Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist

5.0· 1 review

Nich uses relational and narrative therapy to help teens and adults navigate anxiety and trauma, offering an inclusive, intersectional approach to support his clients’ collective healing.


  • Relationship Challenges, LGBTQIA+, and Trauma
  • Self Pay
  • In-Person · Denver, CO 80203
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Katie Schuh
Katie Schuh

Licensed Clinical Social Worker

Katie helps adults and elders navigate ADHD, anxiety, and trauma; she uses cognitive and somatic approaches to foster empowerment and self-compassion.


  • Anxiety, Depression, and ADHD
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Katie Dean
Katie Dean

Licensed Clinical Social Worker

Katie uses EMDR and a calm, mind-body approach to help adults of all ages navigate trauma and life transitions, providing an inclusive space where she empowers her clients to find lasting healing.


  • Anxiety, Depression, and Trauma
  • Aetna, Self Pay, United/Optum, and more
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Karen Eiffert Lubell
Karen Eiffert Lubell

Licensed Clinical Social Worker

Karen empowers adults to heal from trauma and anxiety using EMDR and TIST, providing a calm, relatable space to build lasting resilience and confidence.


  • Trauma, Women's Issues, and Major Life Transitions
  • Self Pay
  • In-Person · Longmont, CO 80503
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Susan Wooldridge
Susan Wooldridge

Licensed Professional Counselor

Susan uses a creative, flexible approach to help individuals and couples heal from trauma, addiction, and relationship struggles to foster secure, rewarding connections.


  • Trauma, Eating Disorders, and Substance Use
  • Self Pay
  • In-Person · Broomfield, CO 80020
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Roberta Robinson
Roberta Robinson

Licensed Professional Counselor

4.8· 5 reviews

Roberta provides empowering therapy for adults navigating trauma, addiction, and LGBTQIA+ topics, using CBT and mindfulness to build self-compassion and healthy boundaries.


  • LGBTQIA+, Trauma, and Anxiety
  • Self Pay
  • In-Person · Denver, CO 80203
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado

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